Do I Become His Prey: POTO, Violence And The Spirit of Transformative Justice

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In This Labyrinth: The Phantom of the Opera In Erik's Times and Ours

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Content warning. This episode weighs in on on-going discussions of whether or not Phantom condones, glorifies or romanticizes violence, especially gendered violence. I argue that it doesn’t! And I discuss how, instead, Phantom addresses certain realities of trauma and makes a powerful case for transformative rather than punitive justice.Support In This Labyrinth: Justice From the Heart of The Phantom Of The OperaLinks:Overview of Transformative Justice by Mia Mingus — This was written for a transformative justice (TJ) intervention I led and I’m sharing it here for others to use in their work. It was meant to be a brief description for those who are not as familiar with the framework and orientation of TJ and do not have the time or capacity to read a large, long document. It is not a history of TJ, nor a complete naming of every part of TJ, or even a thorough fleshing out of all that is named here. It is an introductory description of work that can be hard to describe. It is meant to be a starting point, not an end-point. I hope it may be useful for some of you.An article on Transformative Justice from Teen Vogue.A TJ overview from the California Coalition Against Sexual Assault.An excellent in-depth analysis of TJ from the group Generation Five. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/in-this-labyrinth/message